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SIEV Augustus

事实梗概

SIEV Augustus was a vessel carrying 20 smuggled migrants from Sri Lanka which took on water and ultimately sank, approximately 80 kilometres northwest of Christmas Island on 19 July 1999. Five passengers were rescued by a private yacht. A search and rescue mission by Australian authorities later found one further dead body, leaving 14 persons missing. No prosecution followed this incident.

The vessel referred to as SIEV Augustus by Australian authorities left Sri Lanka carrying a number of smuggled migrants and was accompanied by another vessel. A statement by the then Minister for Immigration, Mr Philip Ruddock, further revealed that: 'At a predetermined point, the crew on the boat carrying the Sri Lankans transferred to the accompanying boat and returned to Indonesia, leaving the Sri Lankans stranded.'

Sometime later, the engine of SIEV Augustus failed, leaving those on board to drift and bail water. Three or four days later, on 19 July 1999, the Augustus sank in rough seas. Five survivors were discovered and rescued by a yacht 80 kilometres northwest of Christmas Island. At that point, the five survivors had spent about eight hours in the water.

Australia's Search and Rescue Centre launched a search for the remaining passengers, but recovered only one dead body, leaving 14 passengers missing.

评注和重要特点

The death of the 14 passengers after the sinking of SIEV Augustus prompted then Immigration Minister Phillip Ruddock to introduce higher penalties for 'people smuggling offences' in Australia, with maximum penalties rising to fines of AUD 220,000 and jail sentences of up to 20 years when more than five people were involved.

Mr Ruddock stated that: 'These tragic deaths should not only deter anyone considering entering Australia illegally, but also highlight the unscrupulous behaviour of people [smugglers].'

程序步骤

法律制度:
习惯法

No person was charged in relation to the sinking of SIEV Augustus.

 
 

移民

移民:
20 persons
国籍:
null

Only five of the smuggled migrants survived after SIEV Augustus sank. Four of these survivors were adult and one was a child.

The five survivors were transported to the Immigration Reception and Processing Centre at Port Hedland, Western Australia.

All five were later granted protection visas in Australia.

来源/引文

This entry was copied from The Migrant Smuggling Case Database, launched by the University of Queensland Migrant Smuggling Working Group in August 2013.

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